But are we really surprised that something like Heartbleed exists? While all websites pledge and preach the safety of their servers and lockdowns on their information, Snapchat should have taught us all a valuable lesson: just because you think it’s gone from the Internet, doesn’t mean it is.

For the most part, it’s been pretty safe. We save research papers to Google Drive, give gift cards through Facebook and purchase cool items through Etsy. But now, all of those websites are on Mashable’s list for passwords you need to change because their servers were affected.

Why? Because the Internet isn’t a safe place. That lock on the top of your search bar is a lie, officially thanks to Heartbleed, and changing your passwords constantly can only do so much. Luckily, there are a billion of us out there and the chances that hackers will definitely find your information are slim; but not that slim.

Snapchat’s big appeal is that a snap disappears after you send it. Last year, it became widely apparent that Snapchat photos didn’t disappear at all and could be found for a few hundred dollars. Didn’t we learn from our questionable Snapchats what’s at stake?

But let’s be real here: as much as I tell you that the Internet isn’t safe, you and I won’t change. We’ll keep Instagramming and saving everything in our Google cloud, pinning our hearts away on Pinterest and liking everything on Facebook. We don’t want to change, even though we know it’s bad for us. We knew that putting our banking info in any website or app was bad in the first place but when you can’t even shop at Target anymore, where can you shop?

We’re in a digital age where our information is up for grabs. But the scarier thing? You’re still shopping at Target.